Happyland: a history of the “dirty thirties” in Saskatchewan, 1914-1937

Abstract

"Dirty Thirties" is the sobriquet commonly applied to the agricultural crisis in the drylands of southern Saskatchewan in Canada that coincided with the Great Depression, and it is generally assumed that prior to this period healthier, normal conditions prevailed. In Happyland, Curtis McManus contends that the "Dirty Thirties" actually began much earlier and were connected only peripherally to the Depression itself. McManus has mined the rarely consulted records of Rural Municipalities in Saskatchewan, as well as government documents, ministerial correspondence, local community histories, newspapers, and publications of relevant government departments, to tell a story of a quarter-century of stubborn persistence but also of absurdity, despair, social dislocation, moral corrosion, and inconsistent and often inept government policy. Thanks to McManuss rare and welcome blend of sound scholarship and living breathing prose, it is a gripping and evocative story as well.

Description

Series: Africa, missing voices series (Online); 5

Citation

McManus, Curtis R., "Happyland: a history of the “dirty thirties” in Saskatchewan, 1914-1937". Series: The West series 5. University of Calgary Press, Calgary, Alberta, 2011.

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 3.0 Unported